UGLY SINGAPOREANS

sorry media, i'm not an etiquette/social watch dog, just a huge fan of public transport. and i would realli enjoy having a gracious bus/mrt ride once in a while. this is juz a hobby, i dun bounce off the walls when i see irresponsible public commuters or disgusting singaporeans.
i can be reached at leongmingen@gmail.com for more information, please DO NOT add me on msn or friendster.

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Pole Dancers and Stickers

this is a good example of a pole danceror rather people who hug the pole like their darlings

this is another pole dancerthis guy in orange is showing a lot of affection for the pole

this is another pole dancerman in bluelean his whole body against the pole

why are there poles?they are for more people to hold from all directionswhen one person leans on the polehe is depriving others from using itsuch selfish behaviourpui!

ok.. this is kinda grossthe little boy dig his noseand paste his "stickers" on the poleno kiddingsee.. he's kneading one wit his tiny left handi'm never gonna touch any SBS poles anymore

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Irwin pulled barb out of chest before death By Paul Tait

this news saddens mecos my family enjoys watching the Crocodile Hunter on Central..sian..

Irwin pulled barb out of chest before death By Paul Tait

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Fatally injured "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin pulled a stingray's serrated barb from his chest before he lost consciousness and died, his manager said on Tuesday as fans worldwide mourned the exuberant naturalist.

Hundreds of fans placed flowers outside his Australia Zoo in Queensland state and wrote messages on khaki shirts, part of his trademark uniform, as Irwin's body was flown home after Monday's freak diving accident off Australia's northeast coast.

Officials offered Irwin's grieving family a state funeral while news of his death on the Great Barrier Reef clogged Internet news sites and ground some Web sites to a halt.

Police have been handed footage taken as Irwin, 44, filmed what was to be his last documentary. It shows him swimming above a stingray when it lashed out and speared him in the heart with its barbed tail, manager John Stainton told reporters.

"There is no evidence that Mr Irwin was intimidating or threatening the stingray," Queensland police spokesman Mike Keating told reporters.

Marine experts say stingrays can deliver horrific, agonizing injuries from the toxin-laden barbs, which can measure up to 20 cm (8 in) in length and cause injuries like a knife or bayonet.

"It's not the going in that causes the damage, it's the coming out where those deep serrations kind of pull on the flesh, and you end up with a very jagged tear which is quite a pronounced injury," said Dr Bryan Fry, deputy director of the Australian Venom Research Unit.

FLIRT WITH DEATH

Australian Prime Minister John Howard interrupted parliament on Tuesday to pay tribute.

"He was a genuine, one-off, remarkable Australian individual and I am distressed at his death," Howard told parliament.

"We mourn his loss, we're devastated by the tragic circumstances in which he has been taken from us and we send our love and prayers to his grieving family," he said.

Stingrays are normally placid and only attack in self-defense. But Irwin's cameraman was filming in front of it and it probably became frightened and lashed out.

Stainton said the cameraman only became aware of the attack when he noticed Irwin bleeding.

Millions had seen Irwin flirt with death many times as he stalked and played with crocodiles, sharks, snakes and spiders. Stainton said he was struggling to come to terms with the fact that a stingray had killed his friend.

"He just seemed to have a charmed life," Stainton said.

Known for his catchphrase "Crikey" during close encounters with animals, Irwin made almost 50 documentaries which appeared on the cable TV channel Animal Planet.

U.S.-based television company Discovery Communications, which produces Animal Planet, said it would set up a conservation fund in honor of Irwin. It said the footage of Irwin's fatal dive might never be broadcast.

Irwin's documentaries attracted a global audience of some 200 million people, many of them in the United States, and fans from Guam to Glasgow jammed Web sites and news blogs. Many asked how they were to explain Irwin's death to their children.

"Why did it have to be Steve Irwin," 11-year-old Daniel told Australian Associated Press.

Friday, September 01, 2006

ANOTHER DAY

good. fat one outside, skinny one inside.this theory allows the skinny one to have a full seat. and the fat one gets 3/4 of his butt onthe seat.if the fat one is inside, the skinny one will only have half the seat.explained 101 times already.

boy's shirt reads: singapore brainiest kidand all the while, the mum's talking bad about the dad who was standin behindthe mum teaches the kid wat a stupid man his dad isand later goes to dad quarrels wit him

i confirm wit you 2 thingsthe boy loses his respect for his dadbecause the dad allows the mum to be the "alpha dominance" figure of the pack (family)second, very soon in school, the boy will be talking to his frens in schoolusing his new-found vocabulary on his friendslike "da ben dan" "shen jing bing"

lower sec Victoria Secondary School boys - SHAME!the bus is not say like crowded and u have to block the doorwayjuz for your own convenience when alightingafter a while, some aunties carrying big grocery bags have difficulties squeezing their way through em.you brought shame to VS boysyou brought shame to floorball players